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- Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Secondsby Syed Balkhi on 07/07/2026 at 10:00
Ever wanted to build an AI support agent for your WordPress website or WooCommerce store? Imagine customers asking a question at 2 a.m. and getting an instant, accurate answer, pulled straight from your own help docs, website content, and custom private SOPs. Plus, it can… Read More » The post Introducing HelpJet: The AI Chatbot That Answers Your Customers’ Questions in Seconds first appeared on WPBeginner.
- WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes)by Syed Balkhi on 04/07/2026 at 10:08
It’s quite surreal to type that WPBeginner turns 17 years old today! I’m incredibly grateful to have the support of such an amazing community of website owners, small businesses, and web professionals. YOU are the best part of WPBeginner! Like every year, I will take… Read More » The post WPBeginner Turns 17 Years Old – We’re Doing a Giveaway ($10,000 in Prizes) first appeared on WPBeginner.
- WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraisingby Editorial Staff on 30/06/2026 at 10:00
Welcome to the June edition of WPBeginner Spotlight! If there is one story this month, it’s AI becoming more integrated into WordPress. With the new WordPress Abilities API catching on fast, your favorite plugins are letting assistants like Claude and ChatGPT actually do the work… Read More » The post WPBeginner Spotlight 25: Let AI Build Your WordPress Forms, Clean Your Database, and Boost Your Fundraising first appeared on WPBeginner.
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- Top AI Agents Built to Catch Malicious Code Can Be Tricked Into Running Itby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 09/07/2026 at 05:15
Ask an AI coding agent to scan open-source code for security holes, and it might run the attacker's code on your own machine instead. That is the finding in a proof-of-concept published Wednesday by the AI Now Institute, an attack it calls "Friendly Fire." It works against Anthropic's Claude Code and OpenAI's Codex when either is running in an autonomous mode that approves its own
- GhostApproval Symlink Flaws Could Let Malicious Repos Run Code in AI Coding Agentsby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 09/07/2026 at 04:27
Researchers at Wiz found that a flaw in six popular AI coding assistants lets a booby-trapped code project quietly take control of a developer's computer. The assistant asks permission to edit one harmless-looking file, but the write lands on a sensitive one instead. The affected tools are Amazon Q Developer, Anthropic's Claude Code, Augment, Cursor, Google Antigravity, and Windsurf.
- Fake 7-Zip Installers Turn Devices Into Residential Proxy Nodesby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 09/07/2026 at 04:01
Cybersecurity researchers have disclosed details of a new threat actor dubbed Lurking Lizard that has been operating an end-to-end malicious residential proxy business using an infrastructure comprising more than 230 lookalike domains. The activity dates back to at least August 2022, according to DNS threat intelligence firm Infoblox. Once such campaign, observed earlier this year, involved the
- AI Coding Agents Found Triggering Endpoint Security Rules Built to Catch Attackersby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 17:02
Sophos looked at a week of its own endpoint data and found that AI coding agents such as Claude Code, Cursor, and OpenAI Codex are setting off detection rules written to catch human intruders. The agents are not malicious. They just do a lot of things that, to a behavioral engine, look exactly like an attack. Decrypting browser credentials, listing what sits in Windows' credential store,
- New HalluSquatting Attack Could Trick AI Coding Assistants Into Installing Botnet Malwareby info@thehackernews.com (The Hacker News) on 08/07/2026 at 15:07
AI coding assistants have a habit of making things up. Ask one to fetch a popular tool, and it will sometimes hand back a real-sounding name for a project that does not exist. New research, which its authors call HalluSquatting, turns that habit into an attack: work out the fake names an AI reliably invents, register them first, and wait for the assistant to fetch your trap on a user's








